Can GM Survive?
Automaker's Stock At 1950 Levels; Ongoing Woes Fuel Questions About Its Future
-
Play CBS Video Video GM Stock Cheaper Than Gas The auto industry gets the one-two punch with high gas prices and falling market shares, Csaba Csere, editor-in-chief of Car & Driver magazine tells Julie Chen.
-
General Motors' stock fell nearly a-third Thursday Oct. 9, 2008, closing at $4.76 a share, the lowest it's been since March of 1950. (Getty)
-
Timeline Financial Meltdown Track major events that lead to one of the most tumultuous times in Wall Street's history.
-
Interactive Eye On The Economy In-depth features on U.S. markets, taxes, employment and the Federal Reserve.
On Thursday alone, General Motors' stock fell nearly a-third yesterday, closing at $4.76 a share, the lowest it's been since March of 1950.
Analysts are questioning its very survival, along with the other two members of Detroit's "Big Three," Ford and Chrysler.
Is this the beginning of the end of the Big Three?
"It probably is to some extent," observed Csaba Csere, editor in chief of Car & Driver Magazine. "I think most people believe the three Detroit automakers will not survive as independent entities going forward. At least one of them is going to either go down or be consolidated with some other car company."
He remarked to co-anchor Julie Chen that, "This has been the worst possible year for the car industry. We started off with a soft economy, falling housing prices, people were feeling poor, and so car sales were very slow getting out of the gate this year.
"Then we got the high gas prices. Gas hit $4 a gallon and really took the truck sales down, and all three of the Detroit carmakers have the majority of those sales in pickups, SUVs and vans, so that really hurt them.
"Then we had this third blow with the financial crisis and, suddenly, it's very hard to get money to lease a car or to buy a car with a loan. And this has really hurt car sales even more.
"So, they've taken three major body blows. And of course, the Big Three carmakers have been losing share for years going into this year. So, this is sort of getting hit hard at the end of an extended illness."
That doesn't mean the picture is entirely bleak, Csere says, pointing out that, "Gas prices going down are helping a little bit. They're at $3.39 or so nationwide. Here in Detroit in some areas, it's close to $3 a gallon already. If that continues, that's going to help them a little bit. The federal loans, the $25 billion package to help the car companies retool for more fuel-efficient cars is going to help them.
"But probably the most important thing right now is for the financial system to come back to life so that people can get money and also so that these car companies can raise some money, because that's what they need in order to retool their factories."
Copyright MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- GM and Ford are american-made cars and I think if they would make it a little more fuel-efficient, they could survive and I hope they do because vehicle wise, they are the faces of America, not nissan and honda. GM, keep on thriving, it will all work out!
- Reply to this comment
- I think GM can survive and become stronger. I know it will be touch and go because of what I might call cash flow, but this nation has always been able to be strong in the face of adversity, and I think we will be now. We need messages of hope and courage from our political candidates, not smears or lies. We need our candidates to talk about what they would do specifically to help make things better, including for corporations like Ford and GM. All the negative stuff serves no purpose at all. It doesn''t help GM, and it doesn''t help those who have lost jobs, homes, pensions, health care, retirement funds and are paying the highest inflation in 27 years. Let''s start talking about what we can do to make things better.
- Reply to this comment
- Yes they can survive, they should bring back the Electric Car!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Who_Killed_the_Electric_Car%3F
They killed it on 2001, just do a search on " who killed the electric car" and you''ll see.
If GM really want to make money they need to give America what it needs and not what the Big Oil thinks it needs. I saw the documentary and I think everyone should see it. Just think if GM would have went ahead with the EV1 they could have prevented the mess they are in now.
Shame on GM and big Oil for killing the EV1!!! Shame! - Reply to this comment
Mike Huckabee on GOP "rock stars," 2012, health care reform and more.



